You must be a bit bad in math. A liter of water divided into 8 equal parts yields 125ml, wow that was easy, it is actually 1/8th of a liter. Which was easy, too. We even have glasses, e.g. wine glasses that have a mark for 1/8th of a liter.
1km/12 is obviously 83 1/3rd meter. If you can not calculate that in your mind, use a pocket calculator.
That a mile can be dived by 12 and yields a whole number as result (does it even? I did not check) does not help anyone. It has no advantage what so ever.
The imperial system is simply superior for everyday life. Every system of units which you grew up with is on the first glance superior to another system if you have to adapt to that one. That does not make it superior in any objective way.
It is only complicated for you because you make it complicated. Open your phone, go to the clock app and simply check what time there is at the other place. Why do you even care if they or you have DST? Only the _time_ is relevant, not the fact if they have DST or you have DST. And, what about your contacts app? Can't be so hard to put the preferred time for a call into the contact info.
Why is this question coming up every few months again?
No it id not time to switch to UTC worldwide, and it never will be.
It is just to convenient to have the sun rise roughly at 6 in the morning, have it over your head roughly at 12:00 and see it sinking in the evening roughly at 6.
Why would I want to replace such nice numbers with UTC times? And then memorize for every spot in the earth when they have day or night?
A prediction assumes no interference to counter it, obviously. I for my oart have a 3 days weekend. So have most europeans, or at least a 2.5days WE. We also have something we call: vacation....
You must be american. No clue about geography? India and overpopulated? Har Har Har Har! One of the most retarded comments on/. this year. (*facepalm*)
That is because google has indexed all your emails. If you get 400k or 650k emails in a tar file, you either have to 'grep' them, which takes time, or use an indexer first, like lucene,
The headline talks about 650,000 eMails. So, no. It would not take a few seconds. Not even an SSD is fast enought to randomly access 650k blocks in a second or a few, on a spinning hard disk it would take minutes to read the headers of so many emails, if not hours. Such analyzises are a disk (I/O) problem, not memory or CPU.
Extremely bad example, because it is wrong. The EU does not prohibit the death penalty.
Further more, every directive/law the EU decides has to be transfomred into national law. There is no sinlge law on EU level that is valid in any member state, unless the memebr state issues the exact same law.
And obviously every member can refuse to do so, albeit under sanctions of the EU.
On top of that ever member can make laws that have nothing to do with the EU and their directives. So: the member states have a lot of sovereignty!
I don't see anything in decline in the EU, except the number of member states;D in case the BREXIT happens. OTOH we likely still have room in the east to add a few countries to make up for the brits.
- Time difference is 12 hours. That's a PITA for everyone. For that god invented issue trackers.
- Dealing with India rules can be very troublesome. Unfortunately true
- Managing a project remotely sucks, and projects have missteps and delays, or they fail. For that god invented agile methods. If you still are "managing" software projects you are doing something seriously wrong.
Feel free to forward them to me, I would like to work with C++ again for a change:D And I have heard that NYC has one of the best House/Underground night clubs: Output.
it's now ingrained into the public consciousness Only in the USA. In Europe a engagement ring can be anything, from a simple silver ring, over a ring with a stone, to the later wedding ring. Most couples don't have or wear engagement rings, the majority that does wear one, is wearing the future wedding ring on the opposite hand (another topic, on which hand to wear the wedding ring, varies from country to country). I actually don't know a single couple that bought engagement rings... but well... most people don't marry anymore anyway.
Of course they do! What has that to do with WinSCP? Or Filezilla? Or more importantly, Filezilla saving passwords in clear text? As far as I can tell: nothing.
BTW: ssh only works if you have a native account on the target system. Neither ftp or sftp require that. Probably you should stop mixing up tools and protocols. Might help you in discussions where this is relevant.
SFTP requires a certificate infrastructure. In other words: it only works if the server you want to connect to via SFTP has an TSL certificate that can be verified somehow.
So, your thrown in comment, off topic as it is, makes not much sense.
Regarding 185 there you might have a point. However it is not executed, unless the person who got "insulted" causes a case. In other words if a policeman is standing right beside me when I insult you, no one would charge me unless you do. In other words it is dead law...
The other paragraphs (186-189) are not libel related. And ofc I'm completely ok with them.
Then again: A90, did you read the last paragraph? As long as the President is not going to court, there is no case. And then again: you claimed "any politician". It is obviously clear now it is only concerns "head of states". Would be a bit silly if we would protect foreign head of states from insults but missed our own president, or not?
Art 166, is not balsphemy as you claimed before, it is about defamation of religions... face palm. And Art 130, is one of those the whole article in which we are posting is about, hate speech. Sigh, that was easy.
nothing says "stupid" like redundant labeling You are mistaken. Nothing says "stupid" like being pedantic about such simple matters. Everyone, including scientists/biologists says HIV virus. Same for any other matter. It is "strictly speaking" wrong: but everyone uses language that way. Get over it and be done with it, you look extremely stupid to me, as you obviously don't now that. On the other hand you simply could be an autist, then it is forgivable.
Sure a master password may help at first glance but it's trivial to crack anything less than 16 characters long and also depends heavily on the encryption used and RNG. No it is not.
That is an completely idiotic claim.
To "crack" the encryption of something, you need a meaningful idea how it looks unencrypted.
If this is my unencrypted list of passwords: why are you trying so hard
you my stumble over them with brute force (using a dictionary), sooner or later regardless how long the master password is (if that is even used as a cipher).
If this is the unencrypted content of my "password file": wdut38;ksdiibn1;0978&llopÃ-; idomjs \nhte;-e,6345h#+2agpw,bcsw
you have no clue that you just found the correct en-/decryption key. Regardless if said key is only 1 char long or 2 or 32.
I guess you mix up winter with snow.
Even countries more or less directly at the equator, e.g. Thailand, have a difference between summer and winter, climate wise and daylight wise.
I work from roughly 10:30 to roughly 19:00
Unless an appointment forces me to be more early in the company.
You must be a bit bad in math.
A liter of water divided into 8 equal parts yields 125ml, wow that was easy, it is actually 1/8th of a liter. Which was easy, too. We even have glasses, e.g. wine glasses that have a mark for 1/8th of a liter.
1km /12 is obviously 83 1/3rd meter. If you can not calculate that in your mind, use a pocket calculator.
That a mile can be dived by 12 and yields a whole number as result (does it even? I did not check) does not help anyone. It has no advantage what so ever.
The imperial system is simply superior for everyday life.
Every system of units which you grew up with is on the first glance superior to another system if you have to adapt to that one. That does not make it superior in any objective way.
A pint weighs a pound
No it does not. I suggest to read up on your units.
Just to nitpick, you likely mean Sedecimal and not Hexadecimal ...
It is only complicated for you because you make it complicated.
Open your phone, go to the clock app and simply check what time there is at the other place.
Why do you even care if they or you have DST? Only the _time_ is relevant, not the fact if they have DST or you have DST.
And, what about your contacts app? Can't be so hard to put the preferred time for a call into the contact info.
You must be american ....
Moving holidays to the end of the month, would not work in any culture that actually has a culture.
Why is this question coming up every few months again?
No it id not time to switch to UTC worldwide, and it never will be.
It is just to convenient to have the sun rise roughly at 6 in the morning, have it over your head roughly at 12:00 and see it sinking in the evening roughly at 6.
Why would I want to replace such nice numbers with UTC times? And then memorize for every spot in the earth when they have day or night?
You are mixing up Sauron with Saruman.
A prediction assumes no interference to counter it, obviously. ....
I for my oart have a 3 days weekend. So have most europeans, or at least a 2.5days WE. We also have something we call: vacation
You must be american. /. this year.
No clue about geography?
India and overpopulated? Har Har Har Har!
One of the most retarded comments on
(*facepalm*)
That is because google has indexed all your emails.
If you get 400k or 650k emails in a tar file, you either have to 'grep' them, which takes time, or use an indexer first, like lucene,
If it had a disk big enough to hold 'that many' eMails ...
The headline talks about 650,000 eMails.
So, no. It would not take a few seconds.
Not even an SSD is fast enought to randomly access 650k blocks in a second or a few, on a spinning hard disk it would take minutes to read the headers of so many emails, if not hours.
Such analyzises are a disk (I/O) problem, not memory or CPU.
Extremely bad example, because it is wrong. The EU does not prohibit the death penalty.
Further more, every directive/law the EU decides has to be transfomred into national law. There is no sinlge law on EU level that is valid in any member state, unless the memebr state issues the exact same law.
And obviously every member can refuse to do so, albeit under sanctions of the EU.
On top of that ever member can make laws that have nothing to do with the EU and their directives. So: the member states have a lot of sovereignty!
I don't see anything in decline in the EU, except the number of member states ;D in case the BREXIT happens. OTOH we likely still have room in the east to add a few countries to make up for the brits.
- Time difference is 12 hours. That's a PITA for everyone.
For that god invented issue trackers.
- Dealing with India rules can be very troublesome.
Unfortunately true
- Managing a project remotely sucks, and projects have missteps and delays, or they fail.
For that god invented agile methods. If you still are "managing" software projects you are doing something seriously wrong.
Feel free to forward them to me, I would like to work with C++ again for a change :D
And I have heard that NYC has one of the best House/Underground night clubs: Output.
it's now ingrained into the public consciousness ... but well ... most people don't marry anymore anyway.
Only in the USA.
In Europe a engagement ring can be anything, from a simple silver ring, over a ring with a stone, to the later wedding ring.
Most couples don't have or wear engagement rings, the majority that does wear one, is wearing the future wedding ring on the opposite hand (another topic, on which hand to wear the wedding ring, varies from country to country).
I actually don't know a single couple that bought engagement rings
Of course they do!
What has that to do with WinSCP? Or Filezilla?
Or more importantly, Filezilla saving passwords in clear text?
As far as I can tell: nothing.
BTW: ssh only works if you have a native account on the target system. Neither ftp or sftp require that. Probably you should stop mixing up tools and protocols. Might help you in discussions where this is relevant.
SFTP requires a certificate infrastructure. In other words: it only works if the server you want to connect to via SFTP has an TSL certificate that can be verified somehow.
So, your thrown in comment, off topic as it is, makes not much sense.
Regarding 185 there you might have a point. However it is not executed, unless the person who got "insulted" causes a case. In other words if a policeman is standing right beside me when I insult you, no one would charge me unless you do. In other words it is dead law ...
The other paragraphs (186-189) are not libel related. And ofc I'm completely ok with them.
Then again: A90, did you read the last paragraph? As long as the President is not going to court, there is no case. And then again: you claimed "any politician". It is obviously clear now it is only concerns "head of states". Would be a bit silly if we would protect foreign head of states from insults but missed our own president, or not?
Art 166, is not balsphemy as you claimed before, it is about defamation of religions ... face palm. And Art 130, is one of those the whole article in which we are posting is about, hate speech. Sigh, that was easy.
Does not run on Linux, Mac OS X, BSD, AIX, Solaris ... and many other OSes.
Probably you should learn to read.
This: Only one of those three uses cleartext passwords over the network.
is not the topic.
The topic are clear text passwords saved in a text file on the clients computer.
nothing says "stupid" like redundant labeling
You are mistaken.
Nothing says "stupid" like being pedantic about such simple matters.
Everyone, including scientists/biologists says HIV virus.
Same for any other matter. It is "strictly speaking" wrong: but everyone uses language that way. Get over it and be done with it, you look extremely stupid to me, as you obviously don't now that. On the other hand you simply could be an autist, then it is forgivable.
Sure a master password may help at first glance but it's trivial to crack anything less than 16 characters long and also depends heavily on the encryption used and RNG.
No it is not.
That is an completely idiotic claim.
To "crack" the encryption of something, you need a meaningful idea how it looks unencrypted.
If this is my unencrypted list of passwords:
why
are
you trying
so hard
you my stumble over them with brute force (using a dictionary), sooner or later regardless how long the master password is (if that is even used as a cipher).
If this is the unencrypted content of my "password file":
wdut38;ksdiibn1;0978&llopÃ-; idomjs \nhte;-e,6345h#+2agpw,bcsw
you have no clue that you just found the correct en-/decryption key. Regardless if said key is only 1 char long or 2 or 32.